Behind Racist Impressions
My experience living in Australia for more than 30 years does not synchronise with the news reports in America of Asians or Asian looking people suffering violence with racial suggestions as victims of robbery attacks.
Racism can be a two edged sword. It may not just be articulated by individuals or groups representing so called mainstream society on minorities - but can also occur the other way. Racism can be subtle or covert, especially when the law or public policy is to ban it, or overt, as in societies like Malaysia, Sri Lanka, South Africa, India, Fiji and Myanmar. Is it better to be able to read racism openly or do we have to put up with it in various shades like career progress ceilings, restricted admissions to prime universities, unspoken loops or barriers and moves behind your back? I would rather be physically attacked than be discriminated in subtle and gradual ways. Talking of individuals who commit violence on the streets of New York, Sydney, London or Perth, there may be unknown factors behind the video clips of such attacks. Is it economic, with no racial intentions at all, or is it an unstable mental health manifestation? Can one be in the wrong place at the wrong time in crime hidden areas? African-Americans and Asian-Americans can come together being discriminated by whites, but Blacks are seen to attack Asians and Asians are heard to look down on Blacks. Maybe we cannot interpret everything through an ethnic identification lens.
As the population of minority groups come to dominate the flavour and flow of certain suburbs in Western nations, the phenomenon of a perceived safety in numbers seems to manifest itself. Increasing numbers of suburbs across Greater Sydney are populated more and more by people who are not Caucasian in background. The so called white Aussie, on visiting such suburbs, can not be blamed to feel possibly left out, as if they have been pushed out of such suburbs by creeping economic, educational and business disparities.
The demographics in regional Australia can be different. I reckon one of the root causes of racism anywhere, even in Malaysia, is the unwillingness of so called racists to reach out half way to better understand the so called other side. Attacks we see by people who seem racist also indicate that that they often have no social connections with people of another ethnic background.
China nationals have arrived in significant numbers to reside in Australia in the so many years before Covid ravaged 2020. They entered residency through higher education, the better purchasing power of a rising middle class back in China and have made business and trading more dynamic in Australian capital cities.
The social habits of China nationals however can be very different from Malaysian migrants who have benefitted from growing up in a multi-racial and more diverse society. Those who migrate from Malaysia tend to mix better with all racial groups in Melbourne, Sydney, Perth and Brisbane. China migrants tend to stick together amongst themselves, perhaps due to their increased reluctance to speak English and always proud to articulate primarily in Mandarin (unless they have no choice). Malaysian migrants like to try a diversity of the wonderful culinary dishes available in contemporary Australia, while most migrants from China I am told, rightly or wrongly, tend to stick to their hot pots, Ma La Tang (spicy hot soups) and niche dishes. The opportunity of Caucasians to know China migrants better is limited to working with them or marrying one of them. When more numbers of a specific ethnic community congregate in certain suburbs, they find they can go through a viable life pattern in Australia without necessarily making social networks with other races. This reality can also apply to migrants of Korean, Thai, Latin American, Polynesian and Turkish origin across Australia, often not out of their choice.
On the other hand, Indian migrants tend to be expressive, are comfortable speaking English and have a more gregarious personality.
The chances and risks of getting beaten up by anyone increases when one has no choice but to be out on the streets and lanes when thugs, unstable people and petty criminals tend to hang about. If I have to do a second job at a fast food joint that closes late at night, I can increase my chances of meeting violence while I transverse a lonely park or busy drug peddler's lane on the way home. If I have to take public transport, I increase my chances of coming across a person who already has addiction, alcohol and mental health issues. Such violent individuals can really beat up anyone in their path - and their social intelligence and experience are so depraved. Many recent migrants anywhere lead a battler's life making ends meet, especially in these Covid ravaged .
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